Table of Contents

Volume 4, Number 2 · February 25, 1965

Martin Bernal, The Popularity of Chinese Patriotism

Communist China, The Early Years: 1949-55 by A. Doak Barnett

Philip Roth, The Play that Dare Not Speak Its Name

Tiny Alice by Edward Albee

Alasdair MacIntyre, Irrational Man

Man and His Symbols edited by C.G. Jung, with an Introduction by John Freeman

Outline of a Jungian Aesthetics by Morris Philipson

Andrew Hacker, Organization Cop

The Police Role in Racial Conflicts by Juby E. Towler

Malcolm Muggeridge, What Price Glory?

The King and His Court by Pierre Viansson-Ponté

Randall Jarrell, The Lost Children (poem)

Malcolm Muggeridge, What Price Glory?

Hostile Allies: FDR and Charles de Gaulle by Milton Viorst

Frances A. Yates, The History of History

Machiavelli and Guicciardini by Felix Gilbert

Maxims and Reflections of a Renaissance Statesman by Francesco Guicciardini, translated by Mario Domandi, with an Introduction by Nicholai Rubenstein

J. Bronowski, Where Do We Go From Here?

Continuities in Cultural Evolution by Margaret Mead

The Future of Man by Pierre Teilhard de Chardin

John Wain, Dylan Thomas Today

Dylan Thomas, His Life and Work by John Ackerman

The Days of Dylan Thomas by Bill Read, by Rollie McKenna

Dylan Thomas and Poetic Dissociation by David Holbrook

Michael Levey, How Much?

The Economics of Taste by Gerald Reitlinger

Ronald Steel, Atomic Wedlock

The Great Debate: Theories of Nuclear Strategy by Raymond Aron, translated by Ernst Pawel

F.W. Dupee, A Laughing Matter

Tartuffe by Molière, translated by Richard Wilbur

Eric L. McKitrick, An Old Story

Rehearsal For Reconstruction: The Port Royal Experiment by Willie Lee Rose

Bernard Bergonzi, A New Angus Wilson

Late Call by Angus Wilson

John Sparrow, Private Lives & Public Life

Lord Denning's Report

Stephen Ward Speaks by Warwick Charlton

The Trial of Stephen Ward by Ludovic Kennedy


Letters

L.R.N. Ashley, Obscenity
Desmond Arthur, Obscenity
John P. Farrell, Obscenity
Donald W. Corrigan, Obscenity
Mary Mackintosh, Obscenity
Ignatius G. Mattingly, It Was Algernon
Jane A. McGregor, Children's Books



Contributors

Andrew Hacker teaches political science at Queens College. He is currently writing a book on higher education in collaboration with Claudia Dreifus. (September 2008)

Randall Jarrell (1914-1965) was born in Tennessee and graduated from Vanderbilt. A poet, novelist, translator, and critic as well as writer for children, Jarrell was a prolific author whose best-known works include the poems collected in The Woman at the Washington Zoo and The Lost World, the academic comedy Pictures from an Institution, the children's story The Bat Poet, and Poetry and the Age, a group of essays. An influential critic who, as poetry reviewer for The Nation, helped to launch the careers of Robert Lowell and other contemporaries, Jarrell taught for many years at the University of North Carolina, where he was much revered. He died in a car accident in 1965.

Eric L. McKitrick is Professor of History Emeritus at Columbia. He is the author, with Stanley Elkins, of The Age of Federalism. (November 2001)

Ronald Steel is Professor of International Relations at the University of Southern California, a recent fellow at the American Academy in Berlin, and the author of biographies of Walter Lippmann and Robert Kennedy. (June 2006)


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